Keeping Your Chickens Cool In Summer

Keeping Your Chickens Cool In The Summer
Keeping your chickens nice and cool in a hot summer can be a huge problem. I've seen so many threads here in BYC about how to keep your chickens cool. Here is the complete guide on how and what to do when your chickens get hot.

Keep A Few Ice Cubes In Their Water
Placing small amounts of ice in their water is a great idea to prevent the water from getting hot and disgusting. One good suggestion is to replace your waterer with dishes in the summer, so they could be easy to clean.

Frozen Water Bottle
Another suggestion I saw here on BYC is that you should freeze water in a water jug completely and place it in the coop run. Your chickens can lie down next to it to keep cool.


Frozen Treats
Who doesn't like a frozen treat on a hot day? However, you shouldn't feed your chickens ice cream. You can freeze fruits, like watermelon and bananas. You can also put chopped strawberries or other fruits and put them in ice cube makers. Pour water over the fruit and pop it in the freezer-- VOILA! You have yourself a chicken ice-pop! For further info, you can visit this link.

Pool Time
Another water idea is to fill up a baby pool with shallow water. Some chickens would love to go wading in a pool on a hot summer's day like us humans.

Spritzing Water
But... do your chickens hate water? If so, on every hot summer's day you should gently spritz a little amount of water in their coop and a bit on their feathers. It helps them cool off--another solution if they hate getting into the water.

Have Shade
Of course, a run without shade will cause heat. If you don't have a small tree or any other shade in your run, you can place umbrellas or parasols on either side of the run--a suggestion found on Google.

All of these are great ideas to prevent your chickens from heatstroke. So, there you go! How to keep a chicken cool and happy during the summer!



Further reading: Topic of the Week - Keeping Chickens Cool in Summer
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AnimalGeek23
I'm all about animals! I'm living with 2 turtles in NYS and a flock of 7 BOs. :)
I love studying poultry and animals!

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Mostly the same ideas as other articles. I'm going to try frozen watermelon tomorrow. We are about to hit 119 degrees and I'm worried about my girls. All the younger ones are now ensconced in my dining room where it is cool, but my laying hens are still outside.
That’s a great idea! I have a window in their coop and put a window fan in. I can unplug it from the outside. Easy to start up in the morning and off at night.
Good ideas!

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I have misters along the top of their fenced in yard that I turn on when its hot they can cool off under them when they need to. Plus all the other things you mentioned. It gets hot and humid here in Oklahoma
 
Great ideas! I went out and put some of those frozen thingys in my waterers. They all crowded around. Then I put about an inch of cool water in a flower pot tray and they all gathered around. Already have a fan on them and we are working on adding additional shade with “sun sails”.
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I have spritzed them with the garden hose from time to time, their 'enjoyment' was marginal at best. They also have plenty of area of shade to run into and rest too.

I tried putting a little box fan up to blow on them, or at least an area they could go in and out of if they wanted a breeze, but they acted like I put a king kong chicken mulching machine up and got totally stupid when I turned it on. I figured ok, give them a little time to get used to it but they all hid in the pen up on the roost and would not come out, so much for that.

All in all, when they free range, they seem to like to hide under the shade of the bushes, it's a bit moist back there too generally as well.

Aaron
 
Could you freeze some bottle waters or a gallon jug with water and put them in a kiddie pool to try and keep the water cool? Would that be ok? or would they be scared of it?
 
I have spritzed them with the garden hose from time to time, their 'enjoyment' was marginal at best. They also have plenty of area of shade to run into and rest too.

I tried putting a little box fan up to blow on them, or at least an area they could go in and out of if they wanted a breeze, but they acted like I put a king kong chicken mulching machine up and got totally stupid when I turned it on. I figured ok, give them a little time to get used to it but they all hid in the pen up on the roost and would not come out, so much for that.

All in all, when they free range, they seem to like to hide under the shade of the bushes, it's a bit moist back there too generally as well.

Aaron
Fans do take a little getting used to- at first, I waited until night time in the coop to introduce them to the idea of the fan seeing as they don't move much after dark. By the morning they seemed fine with it. Now, inside the coop we've got a poultry exhaust fan built into the wall that blows air into the chicken run - with 20" fans up on the level of the upper coops - and have one of those giant fans with wheels they use in huge buildings for the lower roosts. It's now a nightly competition to see who gets the spots right in front of the fans.
 
Could you freeze some bottle waters or a gallon jug with water and put them in a kiddie pool to try and keep the water cool? Would that be ok? or would they be scared of it?

Depends on the chickens I suppose - maybe add the kiddie pool with some sand first so they jump in and out and there's good traction. Then day by day add a little water so it's a small adjustment every day. (leaving the sand for traction)
 
I do want to add a note just as a general caution. Fans = Moving Air. Even though it is cool air, it still WILL dehydrate your birds quickly. When running fans or anything to assist in moving air, always make sure there is plenty of water to drink. A comfortable dehydration IMO is worse, because you are NOT all hot and sweaty, so don't really realize how much it is going on, until problems kick in. (This goes for us Humans TOO !! )

Aaron
 
I do want to add a note just as a general caution. Fans = Moving Air. Even though it is cool air, it still WILL dehydrate your birds quickly. When running fans or anything to assist in moving air, always make sure there is plenty of water to drink. A comfortable dehydration IMO is worse, because you are NOT all hot and sweaty, so don't really realize how much it is going on, until problems kick in. (This goes for us Humans TOO !! )

Aaron


We must balance that with the alternative in serious summer conditions, especially at night when it doesn't cool off. No fans in the coop = chickens panting (releasing very moist air from their bodies at a rapid rate) and overworking their hearts. This applies during the day in the nest boxes as well as all night during hot nights trying to cool off ... no matter how good the coop ventilation is, no matter what you do for them during the day - ice water, watermelon etc - during a heat wave (which we're about to have for weeks) when it's hot at night and there's nothing you can do about it - fans are what make the difference. I don't go to bed until the chickens are comfortable. The very first thing the chickens do at daybreak is head out and get their fill of water.
 
Awesome tips! My chickens have a box fan 24/7. It has 3 settings, I normally keep it on 2 but, on really hot days I turn it up to 3. They also get ice in their water, I have a 3 gallon waterer which I refill with fresh water twice a day. I use a zip-tie dome for my birds, its covered with tarps that provide shade without shutting out light. I also grow strawberries and black berries, I will throw a bag of them in the freezer and give them to the birds the next day, Mint leaves are also part of their normal diet.
 
Will the chickens eat mint leaves? I have heard of them for ridding certain pests but mine don't seem too thrilled with mint, they pick at it and generally leave it.

Maybe I should remove the rest of their real food for a week THEN give them mint, I bet they eat it then!! :p

Seriously though, I got plenty of mint, it grows more like a weed down here. If I could get them to eat it, hmm.
 
Will the chickens eat mint leaves? I have heard of them for ridding certain pests but mine don't seem too thrilled with mint, they pick at it and generally leave it.

Maybe I should remove the rest of their real food for a week THEN give them mint, I bet they eat it then!! :p

Seriously though, I got plenty of mint, it grows more like a weed down here. If I could get them to eat it, hmm.
My chicken love the leaves, but I also dry mint and the put the powder in their feed, and I also often put leaves in their water.

Fun fact about mint, It lowers testosterone levels in chickens
 
I have misters along the top of their fenced in yard that I turn on when its hot they can cool off under them when they need to. Plus all the other things you mentioned. It gets hot and humid here in Oklahoma
I'm in OK too! And the humidity and heat is horrid for sure. All the scraps we normally give them, I now freeze them so they're getting a cool treat plus I put frozen water bottles in their water dishes though out the day in addition to large pot saucers that they use as little wading pools
 
Or you could put the chickens with the ducks, the ducks will splash around in the kiddy pool, getting the chickens wet and keeping them cool. Might be one helluva fight though if a frog happens to jump in. Chikn .vs. Duk in the Frogathalon. one frog enters... 4 birds fed :sick
 

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